During the holy month, Muslim giving peaks. Late-night Taraweeh appeals, daily iftar contributions, Laylat al-Qadr on the odd nights of the last ten, Zakat al-Fitr before Eid prayer, mid-Ramadan Zakat reminders. Most platforms break under the rhythm. Mohseen is built for it.
Daily iftar contributions — feeding the fasting in the masjid, in refugee camps, in food-aid recipient communities. Per-day goal tracking; live thermometer on prayer-hall signage.
The 27th of Ramadan (and other odd nights) is when the night-of-power likely falls. Many Muslims double down on giving — Mohseen handles late-night load with email/push reminders timed to local sunset.
Per-household obligation paid before Eid al-Fitr prayer — typically the price of a meal × household size. Mohseen has a Zakat al-Fitr workflow: household-aware, with the family's local meal-price reference.
Many Muslims pay annual Zakat during Ramadan (rewards multiplied). The 15th-of-Ramadan reminder workflow nudges Zakat-payers with their previous-year amount as a reference.
Bangladeshi diaspora donors prefer bKash. UK donors prefer Stripe + Gift Aid. American donors prefer card. Recurring sadaqah mandates stay on the provider that created them — no failed renewals.
During the month, the daily digest becomes essential. Yesterday's total, top appeals, Zakat-payer count, comparison to last Ramadan. Three sentences each morning, written respectfully.
The Ramadan-night workflow
Late-night Laylat al-Qadr reminders can feel pushy if done poorly. Mohseen sends them with restraint — push notification opt-in only, copy that respects the spiritual moment ("if you are praying tonight, remember this appeal in your du'a"), and never more than one push per Laylat al-Qadr night. The pattern is calibrated for the Islamic context, not generic SaaS notification fatigue.